The Semi-Seminarian

Acts 7 Explained: Stephen’s Trial, the Sanhedrin, and the Sermon They Stopped Listening To

28 min · Gisteren
aflevering Acts 7 Explained: Stephen’s Trial, the Sanhedrin, and the Sermon They Stopped Listening To artwork

Beschrijving

What were they trying to stop hearing? In Acts 7, Stephen stands before the Sanhedrin accused of speaking against Moses, the law, the temple, and the customs. But Stephen does not offer a polite defense. He tells Israel’s story back to Israel’s leaders — Abraham, Joseph, Moses, the wilderness, the golden calf, the temple — and by the time he is finished, the defendant has become the witness, and the judges are the ones on trial. This Bible study and sermon walks through Acts 7:51–60, the death of Stephen, the first Christian martyr, and one of the most powerful courtroom scenes in the New Testament. Stephen exposes the terrifying truth beneath religious resistance: before they picked up stones, they covered their ears. “They cried out with a loud voice, and stopped their ears, and rushed at him with one accord.” — Acts 7:57 That is the question at the center of this episode: Why did they have to stop listening before they could stone him? Stephen’s sermon was not failing. It was landing. The truth had cut too close. The Sanhedrin heard their own story in his words — the rejection of Joseph, the rejection of Moses, the golden calf, the persecution of the prophets, and now the betrayal of the Righteous One, Jesus Christ. Acts 7 shows us that holy things can become hiding places. The temple was a gift, but God was never containable. The law was holy, but it was never meant to become a wall against the Holy Spirit. The customs mattered, but they were never meant to protect us from the living God. This episode explores: * Acts 7 explained in context * Stephen’s trial before the Sanhedrin * Why Stephen mentions Abraham, Joseph, Moses, and the temple * The meaning of “stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears” * Why the council “stopped their ears” * Stephen’s vision of Jesus standing at the right hand of God * The connection between Acts 2 and Acts 7 * The difference between conviction and rage * Why Saul appears at Stephen’s death * How Stephen’s martyrdom shapes the story of Paul * What Acts 7 teaches about resisting the Holy Spirit * Why the truth cuts before it heals In Acts 2, the crowd is cut to the heart and asks, “What shall we do?” In Acts 7, the council is cut to the heart and reaches for stones. Same wound. Different response. This is not just a story about Stephen dying. It is a story about what human beings do when the truth gets too close. We can let the Word of God open us, or we can cover our ears and start reaching for stones — stones of anger, distraction, control, respectability, busyness, or religion that keeps God at a safe distance. But even there, grace is already moving. At the edge of the scene stands a young man named Saul, holding the coats of the men who stone Stephen. Saul approves of Stephen’s death. Saul is complicit. Saul is not yet Paul. But the sermon is already getting into him. The stones silence the preacher, but they do not silence the preaching. Grace had already started stalking Saul. And she is stubborn like that. #Acts7 #Stephen #BibleStudy #ActsExplained #NewTestament #Sanhedrin #StephenMartyr #BookOfActs #JesusChrist #ChristianSermon #Theology #SemiSeminarian #RedDirtTheology #BiblicalTeaching #ResistingTheHolySpirit

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aflevering Acts 7 Explained: Stephen’s Trial, the Sanhedrin, and the Sermon They Stopped Listening To artwork

Acts 7 Explained: Stephen’s Trial, the Sanhedrin, and the Sermon They Stopped Listening To

What were they trying to stop hearing? In Acts 7, Stephen stands before the Sanhedrin accused of speaking against Moses, the law, the temple, and the customs. But Stephen does not offer a polite defense. He tells Israel’s story back to Israel’s leaders — Abraham, Joseph, Moses, the wilderness, the golden calf, the temple — and by the time he is finished, the defendant has become the witness, and the judges are the ones on trial. This Bible study and sermon walks through Acts 7:51–60, the death of Stephen, the first Christian martyr, and one of the most powerful courtroom scenes in the New Testament. Stephen exposes the terrifying truth beneath religious resistance: before they picked up stones, they covered their ears. “They cried out with a loud voice, and stopped their ears, and rushed at him with one accord.” — Acts 7:57 That is the question at the center of this episode: Why did they have to stop listening before they could stone him? Stephen’s sermon was not failing. It was landing. The truth had cut too close. The Sanhedrin heard their own story in his words — the rejection of Joseph, the rejection of Moses, the golden calf, the persecution of the prophets, and now the betrayal of the Righteous One, Jesus Christ. Acts 7 shows us that holy things can become hiding places. The temple was a gift, but God was never containable. The law was holy, but it was never meant to become a wall against the Holy Spirit. The customs mattered, but they were never meant to protect us from the living God. This episode explores: * Acts 7 explained in context * Stephen’s trial before the Sanhedrin * Why Stephen mentions Abraham, Joseph, Moses, and the temple * The meaning of “stiff-necked and uncircumcised in heart and ears” * Why the council “stopped their ears” * Stephen’s vision of Jesus standing at the right hand of God * The connection between Acts 2 and Acts 7 * The difference between conviction and rage * Why Saul appears at Stephen’s death * How Stephen’s martyrdom shapes the story of Paul * What Acts 7 teaches about resisting the Holy Spirit * Why the truth cuts before it heals In Acts 2, the crowd is cut to the heart and asks, “What shall we do?” In Acts 7, the council is cut to the heart and reaches for stones. Same wound. Different response. This is not just a story about Stephen dying. It is a story about what human beings do when the truth gets too close. We can let the Word of God open us, or we can cover our ears and start reaching for stones — stones of anger, distraction, control, respectability, busyness, or religion that keeps God at a safe distance. But even there, grace is already moving. At the edge of the scene stands a young man named Saul, holding the coats of the men who stone Stephen. Saul approves of Stephen’s death. Saul is complicit. Saul is not yet Paul. But the sermon is already getting into him. The stones silence the preacher, but they do not silence the preaching. Grace had already started stalking Saul. And she is stubborn like that. #Acts7 #Stephen #BibleStudy #ActsExplained #NewTestament #Sanhedrin #StephenMartyr #BookOfActs #JesusChrist #ChristianSermon #Theology #SemiSeminarian #RedDirtTheology #BiblicalTeaching #ResistingTheHolySpirit

Gisteren28 min
aflevering Acts 6:1-15 Bible Study | The Food Pantry Catches Fire — Stephen, the Widows & the Spirit artwork

Acts 6:1-15 Bible Study | The Food Pantry Catches Fire — Stephen, the Widows & the Spirit

The Food Pantry Catches Fire — a verse-by-verse Bible study through Acts 6:1-15, where a complaint about a soup line becomes the moment the early church catches fire. This is The Semi-Seminarian: a digital church bell for the exiles, the backsliders, and anyone listening alone in the dark who thought God forgot their address. In Acts 6, the church is growing — and growth always exposes the distance between what you say you are and what your systems actually deliver. The Hellenist widows (Greek-speaking diaspora Jews) are being neglected in the daily distribution while the Hebrew widows get full portions. This isn't Jew versus Gentile. That earthquake comes later in Acts 10. This is family business. This is inside the house. And here's the turn most Bible studies walk right past: the church doesn't just apologize and try harder next week. It hands the ladle to the people it had been skipping. The seven men chosen — Stephen, Philip, Prochorus, Nicanor, Timon, Parmenas, Nicolaus — every one of them bears a Greek name. The neglected community doesn't get a better slot in the line. They get authority over the line. That's not delegation. That's repentance with structure. We dig into the Greek: "serve tables" (diakonein trapezais) shares the same root as "the ministry of the word" (diakonia tou logou). Same word. Same dignity. Luke isn't building a hierarchy — he's building a parallel. The pulpit and the food line are equally holy ground. Then we trace the echo back to Numbers 11, where Moses cries "I cannot carry all these people by myself," and God puts the Spirit on seventy elders. Eldad and Medad prophesy outside the tent. Joshua says stop them. Moses answers with the most dangerous sentence in the Old Testament: "Would that all the LORD's people were prophets." Acts 6 is the beginning of that prayer getting answered — and when Stephen's accusers drag him before the Sanhedrin to spit the word "Moses" like a weapon, his face shines like Sinai itself. They wanted a lawbreaker. They got Sinai. This study asks the question underneath the text: Where's the crack in YOUR food line? The place in your church, your community, your own house where somebody's been getting less — not nothing, just less, slower, smaller. Because Acts 6 says that crack is not a problem to be fixed. It's a sermon to be heard. The Spirit moves through cracks, not credentials. And it refuses to stay in the lane you assigned it. TOPICS COVERED: - Acts 6:1-15 verse-by-verse exegesis - The Hellenist widows and the daily distribution - Stephen, Philip, and the seven deacons explained - The Greek meaning of diakonia (ministry / service) - Numbers 11 and the Spirit on the seventy elders - Stephen's face like an angel before the Sanhedrin - How repentance becomes restructuring, not just apology - Widows as the covenant exam (Deuteronomy 10:18, Isaiah 1:17, James 1:27) Grace before transformation. Presence before performance. Sin builds cities — grace builds altars. The Semi-Seminarian records live sermons and Bible studies for the scattered exiles — the ones finding their way back home. Our metric isn't downloads. It's whether someone we may never meet found the door. If this fed you, tithe your subscribe. No money asked — just hit the bell so the next exile in the dark can find the signal too. 🔔 SUBSCRIBE for weekly verse-by-verse Bible study 🎧 Listen to The Semi-Seminarian podcast wherever you get your shows #Acts6 #BibleStudy #BookOfActs #Stephen #HolySpirit #Sermon #VerseByVerse #ChristianPodcast #Diaconate #Numbers11 #GraceTheology #TheSemiSeminarian #ExpositoryPreaching #NewTestament #ChristianFaith

18 jun 202627 min
aflevering Prison Break in Acts 5: Angels Don’t Respect Religious Paperwork | Peter, Apostles & Holy Spirit artwork

Prison Break in Acts 5: Angels Don’t Respect Religious Paperwork | Peter, Apostles & Holy Spirit

In Acts 5:17–42, Peter and the apostles are arrested, locked in prison, and ordered to stop preaching in the name of Jesus. But during the night, an angel of the Lord opens the prison doors and sends them right back to the temple to speak “all the words of this life.” This sermon explores the powerful story of the angel jailbreak in Acts 5, the jealousy of the Sadducees, the courage of the apostles, Peter’s bold declaration that “we must obey God rather than men,” and the unstoppable witness of the Holy Spirit. The religious leaders lock the doors, post the guards, file the paperwork, and believe the problem has been managed — but heaven does not read the memo. This episode of The Semi-Seminarian Podcast looks closely at Acts 5 and what it teaches about persecution, obedience, resurrection, religious power, spiritual courage, and the gospel that cannot be caged. The apostles are not rescued for comfort; they are redeployed for witness. The angel does not send them home. The angel sends them back to the temple with their mouths open. If you have ever been told to stop doing what God called you to do, if you have ever been silenced by religious authority, institutional pressure, fear, shame, or opposition, this message is for you. Acts 5 reminds us that the same Spirit who opened prison doors still sends the church to speak the truth of Jesus Christ with courage, mercy, and fire. The door was locked. The guards were posted. The cell was empty. The sermon was already back in the temple. Scripture: Acts 5:17–42 Sermon Title: Prison Break Subtitle: Angels Don’t Respect Religious Paperwork Podcast: The Semi-Seminarian Podcast Theme: Peter, the apostles, angel jailbreak, obey God rather than men, Holy Spirit witness, Acts 5 explained Subscribe for more Bible teaching, sermon commentary, Red Dirt theology, Scripture study, and gospel storytelling from The Semi-Seminarian Podcast. #Acts5 #PrisonBreak #PeterAndTheApostles #HolySpirit #BibleStudy #Sermon #ChristianPodcast #TheSemiSeminarian #ObeyGodRatherThanMen #ActsOfTheApostles

14 jun 202626 min
aflevering Acts 5 Explained: Peter’s Shadow, Healing, and Mercy in the Street artwork

Acts 5 Explained: Peter’s Shadow, Healing, and Mercy in the Street

What really happened when people laid the sick in the streets so Peter’s shadow might fall on them? In Acts 5:12–16, Luke gives us one of the strangest and most powerful scenes in the New Testament. The early church is gathered in Solomon’s Portico after the terrifying story of Ananias and Sapphira. Great fear has come upon the whole church. The performance has been exposed. The captions have died. And then, immediately, mercy starts spilling into the street. This Bible study explores Acts 5 and the healing power associated with Peter’s shadow — but not as a superhero story, a magic trick, or a faith-healer origin scene. Luke never says Peter’s shadow healed anyone. He says the people carried the sick into the streets and laid them on cots and mats so that Peter’s shadow might fall across them. That detail matters. This episode asks a deeper question: not “What power was in Peter’s shadow?” but “What made those people willing to be seen?” In a world built on honor and shame, being carried into the public street on a mat was costly. It meant your need, weakness, sickness, torment, and desperation were visible to everybody. And yet Acts 5 shows us people whose desperation finally outran their shame. This is a Bible study about healing, honesty, public mercy, and the courage to stop pretending you are standing when your soul is still lying flat on the ground. We’ll look at: Acts 5:12–16 explained in context Peter’s shadow and healing in the early church Why Luke places this story after Ananias and Sapphira Solomon’s Portico and the public witness of the apostles Honor, shame, sickness, and public vulnerability in the ancient world Why the subject of the story may not be Peter, but the people on the mats How Peter’s denial by the charcoal fire connects to his restored witness Why mercy leaves the building and meets people in the street If you’ve ever felt like you had to perform wellness, manage your image, hide your weakness, or honor God’s mercy from a safe distance, this episode is for you. Mercy has left the building. It is not checking credentials. The question is whether we are willing to be in the street when it walks by. Welcome to The Semi-Seminarian Podcast — Theology Thru The Static. #Acts5 #PetersShadow #BibleStudy #ActsExplained #NewTestament #EarlyChurch #ChristianPodcast #TheologyPodcast #HealingInTheBible #SemiSeminarian #BookOfActs #AnaniasAndSapphira #SolomonsPortico #Mercy #Grace #Faith #WednesdayNightBibleStudy

11 jun 202624 min
aflevering Why Did Ananias and Sapphira Die? Acts 5 Explained | The Choice Is Yours artwork

Why Did Ananias and Sapphira Die? Acts 5 Explained | The Choice Is Yours

What really happened to Ananias and Sapphira in Acts 5? Was this story about money, generosity, church discipline, hypocrisy, or something deeper? In this episode of The Semi-Seminarian Podcast, Pastor Jim Wilhelm walks through Acts 4:32–5:11 and the terrifying story of Ananias and Sapphira — not as a simple “give more money” sermon, but as a hard and holy text about truth, fear, performance, and the presence of the Holy Spirit in the newborn church. The early church was living in resurrection power. They were “of one heart and soul.” No one claimed their possessions as their own. Barnabas sold a field and laid the proceeds at the apostles’ feet. Then Ananias walked into the same room with a different spirit. Peter makes the key point clear: the land was his, the money was his, and he was free to give all of it, none of it, or part of it. The sin was not that Ananias held something back. The sin was that he brought part and called it whole. This Bible study explores: Acts 5 explained in context Why Ananias and Sapphira died What Peter actually rebuked The meaning of “kept back” / nosphizō The connection between Ananias and Achan in Joshua 7 Why the Holy Spirit is not church decoration The difference between honest fear and religious performance Why partial honesty is better than polished hypocrisy What this story teaches the modern church about grace and truth This episode argues that Ananias was not punished for being afraid. He was exposed because he performed surrender instead of telling the truth. And that raises a question for every church, every preacher, every giver, every burned-out believer, and every person trying to look more whole than they really are: Can the church become a room where people are free to bring half and call it half? Because grace is free. But grace is not fake. Jesus did not rise from the dead to build a room where frightened people have to perform. He rose to make a people truthful enough to be healed. If you have ever said “I’m fine” when you were not, ever let people assume your offering was more complete than it was, ever tried to look faithful while hiding fear in the backyard — this episode is for you. This is Acts 5 for the weary, the scared, the church-burned, the honest, the half-holding, and the ones who still want to believe the Spirit can handle the truth. 📖 Scripture: Acts 4:32–5:11 🎙️ Episode Title: The Choice Is Yours 🔥 Theme: Ananias and Sapphira, truth, fear, hypocrisy, generosity, the Holy Spirit, and the early church ⛪ From: First Christian Church (DOC), Cushing, Oklahoma 📻 The Semi-Seminarian Podcast — Theology Thru The Static If this episode helped you hear Acts 5 in a new way, throw the like in the offering plate, share it with somebody who is tired of performing, and subscribe so you’ll know when we’re meeting again. Be blessed. #AnaniasAndSapphira #Acts5 #BibleStudy #ActsOfTheApostles #HolySpirit #EarlyChurch #ChristianTeaching #Sermon #TheSemiSeminarian #PastorJimWilhelm #BibleExplained #ChristianPodcast #GraceAndTruth #ChurchLife #NewTestament

7 jun 202627 min